When looking into health issues relating to weight, medics take note of our Body Mass Index. Our reading should come in somewhere in the region of top teens to mid-twenties. Anything above that figure indicates that we're overweight. What's more if we take that figure over thirty we're defined as obese - over forty and the definition is morbidly obese.
To work out your own index - Use a metric rule to measure your height. Then record your weight in kilograms. Start with a multiplication sum - your height times itself. Then take that answer and divide it by how much you weigh.
To illustrate: you are 1.65m in height, so take 1.65 x 1.65 and you get 2.72. You weigh 82 kilos, so it's 82 / 2.72 which is 30.15. In that example, you would be considered obese and therefore should look to changing your eating habits and exercise regime.
We can't lose weight if we continue to consume foods highly saturated in fats and sugars (save for the odd treat now and again!). We can lose weight by eating more healthily, and eating less. Then the fat that's previously entered our system will be converted into energy.
Stay away from eating programs that sound too good to be true! They're usually so restrictive and unsatisfactory that you can't maintain them for long. Any slimming regime that only allows one and a half thousand calories a day is considered a crash diet. Quick-fix diets can be a vicious cycle of drastic weight loss followed by weight gain.
It takes re-education and time to achieve lasting results. Cut back your calorie consumption to 75 percent of what you eat now, and you should see a few pounds come off every month. So not the un-realistic promises fed to you from the instant remedy brigade, but a real solution to help you stay out of the danger zones.
Fat-laden food tends to contain the highest calories. A great way to reduce your calorific intake therefore is to lower your consumption of food that's high in fat. Replace fatty food with more fibre, from wholegrains, fruit and veg. These changes won't show rapid weight loss, but you'll soon feel the benefits of your healthier diet.
Don't miss out on meals in an attempt to reduce the amount of calories you eat. By the afternoon, you'll be so hungry you might be tempted by chocolate or crisps. In point of fact, eating at least 4 small meals every 3 hours or so will prove much more satisfactory. It's in fact more difficult to lose weight when you starve yourself. Your body can metabolise more productively when it knows it's receiving small regular intakes of fuel. This allows it to get rid of excess fat more easily. - 30241
To work out your own index - Use a metric rule to measure your height. Then record your weight in kilograms. Start with a multiplication sum - your height times itself. Then take that answer and divide it by how much you weigh.
To illustrate: you are 1.65m in height, so take 1.65 x 1.65 and you get 2.72. You weigh 82 kilos, so it's 82 / 2.72 which is 30.15. In that example, you would be considered obese and therefore should look to changing your eating habits and exercise regime.
We can't lose weight if we continue to consume foods highly saturated in fats and sugars (save for the odd treat now and again!). We can lose weight by eating more healthily, and eating less. Then the fat that's previously entered our system will be converted into energy.
Stay away from eating programs that sound too good to be true! They're usually so restrictive and unsatisfactory that you can't maintain them for long. Any slimming regime that only allows one and a half thousand calories a day is considered a crash diet. Quick-fix diets can be a vicious cycle of drastic weight loss followed by weight gain.
It takes re-education and time to achieve lasting results. Cut back your calorie consumption to 75 percent of what you eat now, and you should see a few pounds come off every month. So not the un-realistic promises fed to you from the instant remedy brigade, but a real solution to help you stay out of the danger zones.
Fat-laden food tends to contain the highest calories. A great way to reduce your calorific intake therefore is to lower your consumption of food that's high in fat. Replace fatty food with more fibre, from wholegrains, fruit and veg. These changes won't show rapid weight loss, but you'll soon feel the benefits of your healthier diet.
Don't miss out on meals in an attempt to reduce the amount of calories you eat. By the afternoon, you'll be so hungry you might be tempted by chocolate or crisps. In point of fact, eating at least 4 small meals every 3 hours or so will prove much more satisfactory. It's in fact more difficult to lose weight when you starve yourself. Your body can metabolise more productively when it knows it's receiving small regular intakes of fuel. This allows it to get rid of excess fat more easily. - 30241
About the Author:
(C) Scott Edwards. Check out WeightLossDietWar.com for clear advice on slimming beauty and health weight management.